spirit d jews in the torah portion NELSON LEGACY PRESENTS section name IN PARTNERSHIP WITH COHN-HADDOW CENTER FOR JUDAIC STUDIES Rabbi Elyse Goldstein & A Road Map For The Journey Baruch Sienna Captivating scholars, authors & teachers KEYNOTE PROGRAM LUNCH AND LEARN Wednesday, June 6 at 7:30 p.m. Congregation Beth Shalom - Oak Park Thursday, June 7 at 12:30 p.m. Congregation Beth Shalom - Oak Park Women are from Genesis! Men are from Leviticus! Does gender color the way we read the Bible? $15 in advance, $20 at door Dessert Reception and Book Signing T Making Letters Dance and Fly An interactive workshop on Hebrew text and midrash (Torah commentary) Reservations Required Bloom's Kosher Catering $22 for Lunch and Program Rabbi Elyse Goldstein is a Covenant Award winner for exceptional Jewish educators, an author of ReVisions: Seeing Torah through a Feminist Lens and currently serves as the rabbi of the CityShul Toronto. Her husband, Baruch Sienna, is a skilled calligrapher who created the first Macintosh Hebrew font. His interactive workshop will show how the Hebrew alphabet has evolved, turning letters and words into pictures. COL’S PAINTING LLC 3FTJEFOUJBMt$PNNFSDJBM *OUFSJPS&YUFSJPS$VTUPN8PSL -JDFOTFE*OTVSFE 248-431-7690 DPMTQBJOUJOHMMD!HNBJMDPN CALL FOR FREE ESTIMATES 2255140 50 May 17 • 2018 jn his Shabbat, we begin the reading of the book of Bamidbar, Numbers, which chronicles much of the journey of the Exodus. We always begin the reading of Bamidbar very close to the holiday of Shavuot, the holiday commemorating the giving of the Torah at Mt. Sinai. While this is a coinci- hope and challenge us to dence of the calendar, there continue to put one foot is a lesson to be learned in front of the other and from the connection continue the journey. The between the book and the wisdom of our tradition, meaning of Torah in our in narrative, law or poetry, lives. inspires us to believe in the If we read the words ultimate meaning in our of the Torah as being in lives and not to despair. Rabbi Robert chronological order (which Dobrusin The process of midrash, of we should not always do), commentary, gives us all the beginning of the book the opportunity to add our describes the start of the own personally meaningful journey to Canaan which, touch to Torah to allow it while long and arduous, was to become even more of a personal intended to be a relatively direct guide. one. But, later in the book, we read Many philosophers and Torah the narrative about the people’s commentators wondered why rebellion in the wake of the report the Torah was given in a desert. of the 12 scouts sent by Moses to I believe the lesson to be learned report on the land. This rebellion from this is that the vast, open spaces of the desert can be com- led to God’s decision to have them pared to the vastness of the experi- wander in the desert for 40 years ence of our lives and that Torah so that their children would be the can reach every aspect of our lives, ones to enter the land. When a child is born, we all wish positive or negative. Torah accom- panies us on the long and arduous for him or her a direct, uncompli- and beautiful and glorious journey. cated journey through life. But, we The content of Bamidbar is the know that no journey through life most varied of any book of the is that simple and direct. While we Torah. Ritual, law and narrative all can see many points in life that are woven together to produce a are times for praise and celebra- beautiful text. So, too, we should tion, there are days of sadness and weave the experiences of our lives disappointment and maybe days in which we might see ourselves as into a beautiful work of art by hav- wandering aimlessly through a wil- ing Torah, in all of its forms, be our guide along the way. • derness like our ancestors surely felt at times during those long 40 Robert Dobrusin is a rabbi at Beth Israel years. Congregation in Ann Arbor. But, in our tradition, we have a road map that never leaves us, CONVERSATION even, or one might say, especially, How would you answer the ques- in those difficult times and that is tion: Why was the Torah given in the the road map of Torah. desert? Whenever we feel lost, for what- ever reason, the words of Torah are there to elevate our spirits, give us Parshat Bamidbar: Numbers 1:1-4:20; Hosea 2:1-22